Originally posted by Anna Morris
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So Who Was the Lady in Red?
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Maybe there was no one "Christina" ?
The photograph I posted last above is also supposed to be titled 'Christina' but the girl in it looks slightly different to the other black and white shot labelled 'Christina' in the link Tim posted.
The girl in the bromide print I posted looks a bit like the girl in this one of O'Gorman's other 1913 autochromes to me. This is titled "girl with a bunch of flowers"
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Thanks for the article, Robert, and the new picture, Debra.
There is something special about all of these pictures. I think Wiki said use of a wide aperture gave the misty background, but there is something more too. The last picture Debra posted, girl with flowers and striped shirt for instance, has an unusual appearance of depth from foreground back. I am not technically knowledgeable about photography so have no idea. But as an artist I can say these pictures are extraordinary. I could see at least some of these pictures being trademarked and used commercially. I hope the museum or the families or someone gets something nice for use of these.The wickedness of the world is the dream of the plague.~~Voynich Manuscript
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Thanks, Robert.
Great to see the other pictures O'Gorman took of the family too.
It looks like the 'girl holding a bunch of flowers' and the bromide print I posted above is of Christina's sister, Ann.
Anna, I think the dreamy quality is something to do with the way light is absorbed through the dye stained starch grains used to photograph in colour but I'm not technically up on the process either so don't know for certain-I just thought the pictures had an amazingly beautiful quallity about them the very first time I saw them.
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Debra: There are several things going on with the pictures. The composition is interesting and the technical effect of the film, light, etc. is extraordinary. Beyond that O'Gorman was a very fine artist with an excellent eye for beauty. I was so sure when I first saw your avi, that it was a colorized picture from early silent films. If O'Gorman was an impressionist painter he would rank with Renoir and the other great ones I think. These are very fine pictures.
(I have no idea about the chemical properties of any film. My relative in the film industry recently told me that pictures on video tape are basically a rusting process; the same as rust, though it's a magnetic process. How the tapes can be re-used, I have no idea. Dirty heads in a VCR are because of tiny bits of metal falling off.)The wickedness of the world is the dream of the plague.~~Voynich Manuscript
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Anna, iron molecules are magnetic, under normal circumstances they are all jumbled up so that iron and its alloys such as steel, and iron oxide (rust) are not magnetic as being jumbled they cancel each other out. To create a magnet all the molecules have to be lined up N-S, this can be done by passing an electric current around the iron. A magnetic tape records by varying the electric current passing around the tape, this happens several thousand times per second and several hundred times across the width of the tape. This is also why a tape can be ruined by passing a magnet near it.
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